Rachel Cooke: Her Brilliant Career

by Jenny McPhee

Rachel Cooke, award-winning journalist for The Observer and television critic for the New Statesman will discuss her new book, Her Brilliant Career with Virginia Nicholson. The book is about 10 career women whose lives paved the way for future generations. The Guardian says her book “completely demolishes any notion that the ’50s were just a dull and domestic time for women.” The Independent calls the book “eloquent, witty and elegant.”

Virginia Nicholson is author of Millions Like Us: Women’s Lives During the Second World War, Singled Out, Charleston, and Among the Bohemians.

Writing about our Mothers-and Others: Panel Discussion


by Jenny McPhee

Our panelists will discuss the challenges of writing—in memoir and fiction—about our mothers and others who are close to us. Lyndall Gordon is the biographer of Emily Dickinson, Virginia Woolf, and Mary Wollstonecraft, among others, and is writing a memoir of her relationship with her mother. Katie Hafner, healthcare writer for The New York Times, is author of the forthcoming Mother Daughter Me, a memoir about growing up with her alcoholic mother, which Jane Smiley calls “an unusually graceful story, one that balances honesty and tact.” Joanna Hodgkin’s Amateurs in Eden tells the story of her mother Nancy Durrell’s marriage to novelist Lawrence Durrell. Bella Pollen is the author of five novels, of which the latest, The Summer of the Bear, returns Pollen to a beloved place of childhood holidays. Sarah Glazer is a journalist and co-organizer of the Upper Wimpole Street Literary Salon.

Novelist and Nonfiction Author Daisy Waugh

by Jenny McPhee

In a delightful double-whammy, Daisy Waugh talks about her new novel Melting the Snow on Hester Street, the story of a high-society marriage set against the backdrop of the Golden Age of Hollywood. And she’ll give us an ante prima of her book due out in June: I Don’t Know Why She Bothers: Guilt-Free Motherhood for Thoroughly Modern Women, in which Daisy wages war on the parenting experts and the modern, middle class mothering brigade who have turned motherhood from a happy passage of life, to a sacrosanct, life consuming and anxiety-driven vocation.